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Welcome

At Kane Street, we bring the wisdom and compassion of Jewish traditions to all, regardless of one’s background. Within our community are very traditional Jews and secularists, families and singles, straight and gay. Our members include many Jews-by-choice (converts) as well as interfaith families and Jews who are returning to their roots. We are rightly regarded as a community where any sincere person can find a place.

News and Upcoming Events

Party at our Purim Celebration for Young Children on Sunday, March 17 from 10:30am-12:00pm. $20/family. RSVP at kanestreet.org/purim.

Hear the Megillah on Wednesday, March 20. Chapel service: 7:00pm. Lively sanctuary event: 7:15pm. Purim Day Services are on Thursday, March 21 at 7:30am.

Participate in Pasta for Purim! Bring a box of pasta (instead of a gragger), which we will donate to CHiPS, a nearby soup kitchen and shelter.

There’s Still Time to Sponsor Mishloach Manot!

Although your name won’t be on the card in our Purim bags, you can still make a Mishloach Manot donation! Sign up to sponsor mishloach manot, our Purim packages filled with hamantashen and other treats. It has been a custom for centuries to give Purim baskets to celebrate the Jewish people’s survival. Each package includes a card listing our generous sponsors. Your gift will allow us to give mishloach manot to synagogue members, pre-school students and staff. Your donation also supports Kane Street Synagogue.

Pirkei Avot Community-wide Study

This March, we begin a half-year community-wide learning of Pirkei Avot (Wisdom of Our Sages), a compilation of ethical teachings and sayings whose ideas and insights are accessible and enlightening to all learners, whether you have never before engaged in Jewish learning or have an extensive background.

Dora Bruder by Patrick Modiano
Discussion on Thursday, May 2 (day after Yom HaShoah), 7:00pm
Patrick Modiano opens Dora Bruder (the 2014 Winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature) by telling how in 1988 he stumbled across an ad in the personal columns of the New Year’s Eve 1941 edition of Paris Soir. Placed by the parents of a 15-year-old Jewish girl, Dora Bruder, who had run away from her Catholic boarding school, the ad sets Modiano off on a quest to find out everything he can about Dora and why, at the height of German reprisals, she ran away on a bitterly cold day from the people hiding her. Discussion facilitated by retired Brooklyn College Professor of English and American Literature, Julia Hirsch. View this year’s selections and discussion dates. Contact [email protected] for more information.

Shabbat Learners’ Service March 16

For those who want help navigating and further exploring the Shabbat morning service, our twice monthly Learners’ Service offers a space to learn about the service, explore your questions, and pray slowly together. Led by Rabbi Jason Gitlin and congregants. See schedule for year.

Li’fi Dati: As I See It

Excerpted from a sermon by Rabbi Weintraub on Shabbat T’tzaveh 5779, February 16, 2019

Dear friends,

Increasingly, the topic of domestic anti-Semitism is the subject of my conversations with you, at Kiddush, at social gatherings, at our committee and Board meetings. Especially since the Pittsburgh tragedy, we feel suddenly vulnerable in the Sanctuary, even on Shabbat. I want this Shabbat to reflect on this and try to find a positive way forward.

American Jews over the last two years have experienced an uptick in fear and anxiety.

We have witnessed anti-Semitism across the political spectrum, from neo-Nazi demonstrations to the original refusal of Women’s March organizers to recognize anti-Semitism as a real, persistent form of oppression.

Still, I want to underscore one fact shown by the investigations of the ADL and other long time observers. Targeted, physical anti-Semitism—murders, violent assaults, bomb threats, and vandalism—is overwhelmingly the result of activity by right wing, especially white nationalist groups.

In a celebrated, recent report, the ADL found that over 2016 and 2017 our country saw the largest one year jump in anti-Semitic incidents than in the entire forty years of ADL recording.continue reading